Don’t expect to hear Sammy Sosa sing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” any time soon.

A day before the National League champions play their first World Series game at Wrigley Field since 1945, “Slammin’ Sammy” isn’t joining any of the festivities on Chicago’s North Side.

And it has nothing to do with the former slugger’s vacation plans. Sosa reasons the Cubs want nothing to do with him.

“What about Sammy Sosa?” he asked. “Maybe you can take it from there.”

The face of some of the Cubs’ ugliest teams in the 1990s and 2000s, Sosa continues to be shunned by his former team. He says three years have passed since he last had any communication with anyone in the Cubs organization.

And on the eve of Games 3 through 5 against the Indians at Wrigley, Sosa is traveling in Paris to look at real estate while many former teammates are expected to attend the series.

“I haven’t done anything wrong,” Sosa told the Wall Street Journal. “I played almost 13 years in Chciago and the only thing I did was play good, play hard and give everything I had for the fans. If they don’t respect that, if that’s not good enough, hey, so be it.”

Sosa, now 47, blasted 545 of his 609 career home runs with the Cubs and seemed like a clear first-ballot Hall of Famer before his name surfaced with other players in a 2009 report for testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs during the 2003 season.

It’s not just the organization tossing Sosa to the side. Former teammates Kerry Wood, Ryan Dempster and Rick Sutcliffe declined to speak about Sosa.

“Right now, our focus is on baseball and winning the World Series,” Cubs spokesman Julian Green told the Journal.

Perhaps a Cubs championship will heal the organization’s gripes with the former face of their franchise.